BishopAccountability.org
 
  News Briefs

The Sudbury Star
November 21, 2009

http://www.thesudburystar.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2187458

WILMINGTON, Del.-- The Catholic Diocese of Wilmington is obligated to pay retirement benefits to six priests who are confirmed pedophiles, church officials argued in a bankruptcy court filing Thursday seeking permission to keep making the payments.

After filing for bankruptcy last month, the diocese agreed not to make payments to priests accused of sexual abuse without court approval. That agreement was made after objections were raised by attorneys for alleged abuse victims who now sit on a creditors committee.

Attorneys for the diocese now seek authorization to provide pensions, housing costs and medical coverage to six confirmed child abusers. They cited an obligation to care for retired clergy, including priests dismissed from public ministry and facing laicization, or defrocking.

"Only the Vatican has the power to laicize clergy," the diocese said. "Thus, while several priests have been dismissed from the public ministry and have laicization proceedings pending against them, for the time being they remain clergy whom the debtor supports, and must continue to support."

The motion also seeks permission to keep paying benefits to another priest who has been accused of sex abuse, though the claims have not been substantiated. He still has authority to serve as a priest.

The diocese argues that pension payments would not be taken from funds that might be used to pay creditors, including abuse victims waiting for settlement payments.

James Stang, an attorney for the creditors committee, described the filing as "outrageous."

Officials with the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, could not recall a similar motion in the six other bankruptcies involving Catholic dioceses in the U. S. The group also noted that the Wilmington diocese is paying a public relations firm a minimum of $100,000 for bankruptcy-related work.

"It's morally wrong for a church official to cry poverty and then pay six figures to a PR firm. And it's morally wrong for a church official to put helping child predators ahead of helping child victims," said Barbara Dorris, national outreach director for SNAP.

The diocese wants to continue paying medical coverage for former priest Francis DeLuca, 80, who was removed from public ministry in 1993 and defrocked last year after serving a jail term in New York for repeatedly abusing his grandnephew.

The diocese said it has provided DeLuca "charity" since he was defrocked in the form of a $1,000 monthly allowance and medical coverage. The allowance has been terminated, but the diocese still wants to provide medical coverage.

INDEPENDENT SCIENTISTS SAY PROGRAM CAN EXTEND LIFE OF NATION'S NUCLEAR WEAPONS

ALBUQUERQUE, N. M.-- An independent panel says the United States can extend the life of aging nuclear weapons for decades with existing programs, a finding that activists contend means there's no need for the nation to design replacements for the nuclear arsenal.

The findings of the JASON committee are classified, but an unclassified summary released Thursday said current methods are sufficient to keep the weapons reliable in the absence of nuclear testing.

The group of independent scientific experts who do technical reviews for the government said the program's success "is a direct consequence of the excellent work of the people in the U. S. nuclear weapons complex."

The executive director of the Washington, D. C.-based Arms Control Association says the key conclusion is that the program can work well into the foreseeable future.

4 IN NORTH CAROLINA HAVE TAMIFLU-RESISTANT FLU, FIRST SUCH U. S. CLUSTER: CDC

ATLANTA-- U. S. health officials say four people in North Carolina have tested positive for a type of swine flu that's resistant to the drug Tamiflu.

It's the first cluster of that many cases seen in the U. S. Health officials said Friday the four cases were reported at

Duke University Medical Center in Durham over the past six weeks.

Tamiflu is one of two medicines that help against swine flu. Health officials have been closely watching for signs that the

virus is mutating, making the drugs ineffective. About 52 resistant cases have been reported in the world

since April, including 15 in the U. S. so far. Officials with the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say almost all the U. S. cases have been isolated.

 
 

Any original material on these pages is copyright © BishopAccountability.org 2004. Reproduce freely with attribution.